You Asked For It America: Craig Mazin Hired To Write 'The Hangover Part 3'

By
Kevin Jagernauth
|
The PlaylistMay 31, 2011 at 9:56AM

Will The Wolfpack Head To Amsterdam Next?Well this was inevitable. After "The Hangover Part II" shattered the R-rated comedy opening weekend numbers this past Memorial Day holiday with a ridiculous $135 million haul, plans are already moving on a sequel. And as befits a sequel that was a lukewarm and ultimately pretty boring retread of the first film, it looks like they're gonna keep watering it down for the next go-round.

Will The Wolfpack Head To Amsterdam Next?

Well this was inevitable. After "The Hangover Part II" shattered the R-rated comedy opening weekend numbers this past Memorial Day holiday with a ridiculous $135 million haul, plans are already moving on a sequel. And as befits a sequel that was a lukewarm and ultimately pretty boring retread of the first film, it looks like they're gonna keep watering it down for the next go-round.

The Wrap reports that Craig Mazin, who co-wrote "The Hangover Part II," has been hired back to pen the third installment. To those of you who disagreed with our sentiment that the film is pale copy of its predecessor that manages to both up the raunch and the filth and remain kind of boring all at the same time (this writer began losing interest after about an hour), this would be a good time point out that Mazin's previous credits include: "Scary Movie 3," "Scary Movie 4" and "Superhero Movie." He also was one of the producers on what is arguably Todd Phillips' worst film, "School For Scoundrels." So if you want more of the same, that's exactly what you're gonna get. Mazin will probably just take the "The Hangover 2" script, scratch out wherever it says Bangkok, and replace it with something else.

So where will the The Wolfpack go next? “Probably Amsterdam,” Jamie Chung told THR at last week. “If you think of the coolest, craziest cities in the world, it would have to be Las Vegas, Bangkok and Amsterdam.”

“Amsterdam could be a different kind of hangover,” Justin Bartha added. “It could be fun. And Zach [Galifanakis] will probably already be there.”

But by time they get to filming, Amsterdam could no longer be the pot haven of the world. The Netherlands government recently announced that they may be drastically changing the rules surrounding their famous "coffee shops": banning tourists entirely and making it more difficult for native citizens to get their brownies. Seems like a pretty effective way to kill tourism to the country in general, but what do we know. Either way, Todd Phillips recently said a third film would end the franchise, but if it keeps making this kind of mad cash we're sure Warner Bros. will want to keep it going.

While we wish the original "The Hangover" writers Jon Lucas and Scott Moore would come back, but they're busy getting their own directorial career off the ground. "Rabbit Hole" star Miles Tellerrecently signed on in the lead role of the pair's directorial debut "21 And Over." But it doesn't seem like they're straying too far from "The Hangover" wheelhouse. The film follows "two childhood friends who drag their straight-arrow buddy out to celebrate his 21st birthday the night before an all-important med school interview. But when one beer leads to another, the evening spirals into a wild epic misadventure of debauchery and mayhem that none of them will ever forget."

Is it possible to get a hangover from hangover movies? We're beginning to think so.